The campaign has been sustained by contributions from WND visitors and others who have
discovered it from simply driving past a billboard.

Farah is convinced that it’s working and promises to sustain it if he can continue to get financial help.

“No matter how hard my colleagues try to make the public forget about this issue,
no matter how hard they attempt to ridicule anyone who wants to see the proof, no matter
how much they demean even decorated military officers who take their own oaths seriously,
this issue will not go away. It’s going to be around in 2012. It may even be the defining
issue in 2012,” he said.

The latest
CBS–New York Times poll showed only 58 percent of Americans even think
Obama was born in the USA. Another later poll by CNN indicated six in 10 hold doubts about
Obama’s birth and, therefore, eligibility.

Billboard near Talledega, Ala.

“I’m quite sure based on our own polls that if those people were asked whether
they would like to see Obama release his birth certificate, more than half the country
would say ‘yes’ – and all the other personal papers he has refused to
disclose,” Farah said.

Farah says the billboards have had a lot to do with changing popular opinion
– even if the media don’t get it.

“People simply shouldn’t have to conjecture about where they think their president
was born,” he says. “It ought to be a matter of public record – and it
clearly is not.”

“The impact of the billboards is magnified by local television and talk-radio
shows in every market they enter,” explains Farah. “It’s not just the billboard.
It’s the earned media that comes along with it. It’s astounding. We have turned millions
of people around on this issue with the billboards. It’s just that simple.”

“What I need Americans to understand is that this billboard campaign is working,” said Farah. “There is no shortage of billboards available to us. The only thing there’s a shortage of is the money to erect them. We need to raise tens of thousands of dollars a month just to keep them in place.”

“The impact of the billboards is magnified by local television and talk-radio shows in every market they enter,” explains Farah. “It’s not just the billboard. It’s the earned media that comes along with it. It’s astounding. We have turned millions of people around on this issue with the billboards. It’s just that simple.”

“There are all kinds of things we need to do right now to get our country back on
track, but I can think of nothing more important than for us to see that our Constitution
is observed, followed, adhered to and honored, especially when it comes to such simple,
straightforward matters as the eligibility of the president of the United States,”
says Farah. “Please
help me bring this matter to a head right now.”